Vladimir Jovanović

Vladimir Jovanović (Serbian Cyrillic - Владимир Јовановић; born September 28, 1833 in Sabac, † March 3, 1922 in Belgrade ) was a Serbian statesman and writer.

Jovanović studied in Vienna and Berlin, and in 1856 professor of economics at the Agricultural Academy in Topčider. He took in 1858 a prominent part in the expulsion of Prince Aleksandar Karađorđević, was appointed by Miloš Obrenović to the Secretary of the Treasury and the editor of the Journal, but dismissed his radical tendencies due soon and then lived in Belgium, England, Italy and Switzerland, where he in Geneva from 1864 to 1866 the Serbian French newspaper Sloboda - La Liberté published.

After he was shortly afterwards been a professor at the Belgrade University, he joined the Omladina and was co-editor of the Zastava. He was taking part in the assassination of Prince Mihailo Obrenović accused, but acquitted, he went abroad again and did not return until 1872 back to Serbia, where he now entered the civil service and a member of the Skupština, the Serbian parliament, was.

At the outbreak of Serbian Ottoman War in 1876 appointed Minister of Finance, he brought the necessary warfare bond into being and led the Serbian coinage gold coins one after the monetary standard of the Latin Monetary Union. After he was released end of 1879, he was President of the Court, then in June in 1880 Finance Minister, but resigned in October 1880, the Cabinet Jovan Ristic back.

In addition to national economic and political writings in the Serbian language ( including translations of the works of St. Mills and Roscher ) wrote Jovanović patrimony of Les et le Commission de la Serbie dans l'Europe d'orient (Paris 1870), The emancipation and unity of the Serbian nation ( Geneva 1873), among others

His son Slobodan Jovanović was an important lawyer.

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  • Politicians (Serbia 1804-1918 )
  • University teachers ( Belgrade )
  • Born in 1833
  • Died in 1922
  • Man
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